All Questions
12
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End points of event horizon
I am reading The Nature of Space and Time by S. W. Hawking. In the last paragraph on page 16 he said that:
event horizon may have past end points but don't have any future end points
I understand ...
3
votes
1
answer
79
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How to Understand Negative Energy in the Ergoregion?
I am trying to understand the Penrose process and having trouble explaining negative energy in the ergoregion.
How I interpret it is:
Energy is the dot product between the four momentum of the object ...
2
votes
2
answers
161
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If I were to drop my phone into a black hole, would I be able to catch it?
Say, for the sake of argument, I am outside the event horizon of a black hole and accidentally drop my phone (or some other object) into the hole. If I were to enter the black hole, would I ever be ...
4
votes
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84
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Conformal Diagram for Astrophysical Black Hole
I have a question about the conformal diagram of an ‘astrophysical’ black hole which forms in finite time (but with no evaporation).
Usually I see the conformal diagram presented as something similar ...
1
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1
answer
117
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(1+1)d collapsing null-shell?
I am trying to understand the following Penrose diagram (from https://arxiv.org/abs/1507.03489)
According to the authors, it is depicting the formation of a (1+1)d black hole from a collapsing null ...
3
votes
1
answer
808
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Why are inner horizons Cauchy horizons?
I know that RN black hole has two horizons, one outer one and one inner one. The outer one is the event horizon.
As far as I know, a Cauchy horizon is the boundary of the domain of dependence of a ...
1
vote
1
answer
85
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How to describe ‘when’ a black hole actually is? [closed]
If I look at any point in space I can think of it as being in the future because it takes me time to travel there. I can go there and an observer can watch me go there.
When I look at a black hole I ...
2
votes
2
answers
275
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How can the universe have an event horizon?
As I understand it (correct me if I'm wrong), the universe has an event horizon, and we can't possibly know if there's anything beyond it. This is due to the expansion of the universe, that space is ...
6
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1
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473
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Why can't light travel past the event horizon?
Since the event horizon is defined as the boundary within which the escape velocity is greater than the speed of light, and escape velocity is the speed required for that object to reach infinity away ...
1
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0
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133
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What would the eternal black hole look like?
The white hole and black hole regions in a Kruskal diagram are said to be actually two different locations. Given the problems with white holes it might be a silly question but, hypothetically, what ...
1
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1
answer
80
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Define event horizon using only the notions of events and causality
Does this work?
Consider a set $B$ of events which satisfies
If $x$ belongs to $B$ and $x$ causes $y$ then $y$ belongs to $B$. The event horizon of $B$ is the set of events that are not in $B$ but ...
1
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1
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334
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Is there a general definition of a causal horizon?
In the Schwarzschild spacetime with metric in standard Schwarzschild coordinates
$$ds^2=\rho(r)dt^2-\rho(r)^{-1}dr^2-r^2d\Omega^2,\quad \rho(r)=1-\dfrac{2GM}{r},$$
we have a coordinate singularity ...